Coriolanus

Roman legend tells of Gnaeus Marcius Coriolanus, a
patrician
of the 400s
B
.
C
. Although he may have been a real person, no firm evidence of his
existence survives.

According to the story, Gnaeus Marcius earned the name Coriolanus by
capturing the town of Corioli from the Volscian people. Proud and
disdainful of the lower classes, Coriolanus opposed giving grain to the
poor people of Rome in time of famine, and he sought to restore the
special privileges of aristocrats. Banished from Rome, he committed
treason by leading the Volscian armies against his own city. The Volscians
were on the point of capturing Rome when Coriolanus, moved by the pleas of
his mother and his wife, changed his mind and ordered the army to
withdraw. Some accounts say that the Volscians killed him; others tell of
his spending the rest of his life in miserable exile from Rome.

patrician
aristocrat or member of the noble class

The legend of Coriolanus was powerful enough to make him the subject of
works by the Greek writer Plutarch* and by William Shakespeare.
Coriolanus,
the last of Shakespeare's tragedies, uses strong language to portray a
proud, inflexible warrior whose scorn for others brings about his
downfall.